The life and times of famed hot rod & custom car designer Ed "Big Daddy" Roth.The life and times of famed hot rod & custom car designer Ed "Big Daddy" Roth.The life and times of famed hot rod & custom car designer Ed "Big Daddy" Roth.
Ted Rosnick
- Rat Fink
- (voice)
- (as Theo Rosnick)
Alex Xydias
- Old-Timer
- (voice)
Paul Le Mat
- Cruisin'
- (voice)
Ann-Margret
- Heartbreaker
- (voice)
Dick Smothers
- Station Wagon
- (voice)
Tom Smothers
- Trailer
- (voice)
Steve Austin
- Heavy Chevy
- (voice)
Jay Leno
- Flamethrower
- (voice)
Bill Weinstein
- Bill
- (voice)
Marilyn Weinstein
- Marilyn
- (voice)
Robert Williams
- The Outlaw
- (voice)
Billy Gibbons
- Beatnik Bandit
- (voice)
- (as Billy F. Gibbons)
Tom Wolfe
- Tom Wolfe's Car
- (voice)
Brian Wilson
- The Surfite
- (voice)
Matt Groening
- Finkster
- (voice)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Ed "Big Daddy" Roth must have been a kick to be around and this documentary does a good job highlighting his many artistic and mechanical triumphs. The one minor downfall of the film involves having a little too much animation which made me feel like I had actually lost equilibrium at times with colors and objects crashing onto the screen. All in all I would say it's a fun watch with many actors having a blast voicing Ed's cars. Motorheads will especially enjoy Tales of Rat Fink with all the cool old custom Hot Rods.
Lovers of hot rods and Ed 'Big Daddy' Roth are definitely the audience for this film, so the fact that I wasn't particularly enamored by the film is mostly because I am not a fan. Keep this in mind when reading my review--it's not for the hard-core fans but for someone who just likes to watch documentaries.
From my outsider point of view, this was a pretty weird documentary because of it's style. First, because Roth was dead by the time they made this film, John Goodman narrated the film as if he were Roth. And, other celebrities (such as the Smothers Brothers and Jay Leno) also lent their voices--so it's pretty unusual from the outset. Second, many of Roth's designs (especially his famous 60s "Rat Fink") were animated and many old clips were pieced together to make up the film--so you really didn't get much new content. Finally, the film tried very hard to be funny--with talking cars (like you'd see in "My Mother the Car") and rocking campers with personalities that DIDN'T make me laugh. Again, none of these are necessarily "bad", but a bit unusual and hard for non-fans. However, I have to give the film its due--it certainly was innovative and the sound was exceptional--with a great surround-sound quality.
Still, given my predisposition, the film didn't win me over because I just didn't get hooked by all the excitement. It wasn't me.
From my outsider point of view, this was a pretty weird documentary because of it's style. First, because Roth was dead by the time they made this film, John Goodman narrated the film as if he were Roth. And, other celebrities (such as the Smothers Brothers and Jay Leno) also lent their voices--so it's pretty unusual from the outset. Second, many of Roth's designs (especially his famous 60s "Rat Fink") were animated and many old clips were pieced together to make up the film--so you really didn't get much new content. Finally, the film tried very hard to be funny--with talking cars (like you'd see in "My Mother the Car") and rocking campers with personalities that DIDN'T make me laugh. Again, none of these are necessarily "bad", but a bit unusual and hard for non-fans. However, I have to give the film its due--it certainly was innovative and the sound was exceptional--with a great surround-sound quality.
Still, given my predisposition, the film didn't win me over because I just didn't get hooked by all the excitement. It wasn't me.
As a fan of Kustom Kulture, I enjoyed this unique collaborative as a tribute to one of it's most influential and commercially successful icons. While it was not a complete biography, it did capture the spirit of Ed Roth which lives on through his work and his fans.
There are so few of the original "kings" of Kustom Kulture living today (like master pin striper Lyle Fisk shown on the film's "bonus features" and kustom builder George Barris) while most of the kulture's founders (Von Dutch, Boyd Coddington and many others in addition to Bid Daddy) have passed. I would love to see a feature-length documentary on the history of Kustom Kulture and how that kulture is alive and well today.
There are so few of the original "kings" of Kustom Kulture living today (like master pin striper Lyle Fisk shown on the film's "bonus features" and kustom builder George Barris) while most of the kulture's founders (Von Dutch, Boyd Coddington and many others in addition to Bid Daddy) have passed. I would love to see a feature-length documentary on the history of Kustom Kulture and how that kulture is alive and well today.
Well, some of the silliness of the animations was a bit over the top but I figure they didn't have enough real footage to fill out an entire movie.
It was imaginative, and to its credit, it was a primer on the tremendous impact of this forgotten artist.
Forgotten? Well, I forgot about him. Wow, my brother was really into hot rods and he had all the magazines and the CARtoon books and such and I read all of the latter and marveled at Big Daddy's creativity, even in my early teens. Everything came rushing back when I saw this movie.
Let's face it, the guy was far out, he was into his thing, and he really did provide an inspiration for the art/media/design/culture that was to come in just a few years.
Wow.
It was imaginative, and to its credit, it was a primer on the tremendous impact of this forgotten artist.
Forgotten? Well, I forgot about him. Wow, my brother was really into hot rods and he had all the magazines and the CARtoon books and such and I read all of the latter and marveled at Big Daddy's creativity, even in my early teens. Everything came rushing back when I saw this movie.
Let's face it, the guy was far out, he was into his thing, and he really did provide an inspiration for the art/media/design/culture that was to come in just a few years.
Wow.
10dchod
As a member of Rat Finks of America, I have a very high standard for all that is Fink, and Ron Mann's "Tales of a Rat Fink" did not disappoint. This jacked-up semi-animated documentary of the hotrod culture's greatest patriarch, Ed "Big Daddy" Roth is a film that entertains and teaches us how and why we are obsessed with customizing cars. Roth was an enigmatic soul, a freethinker and rule breaker, and Mann has captured his essence with original film making and stylized story telling. Though he was an iconoclast, Roth wanted his work to appeal to all audiences--kids and adults, and this film follows in that image. There is so much detail and substance here, yet the film speeds by and changes lanes as necessary without refueling. It was a joy to watch and will serve generations to come. Long live Rat Fink!!
Did you know
- Crazy creditsGood Advice - Sara Driver, Elliott Lefko, Paul Mavrides, Joe Medjuck, Michael Mendelson, Paul Quarrington, Bill Schroeder, Gary Topp, Larry Weinstein, The Juggernaut
- ConnectionsFeatures The Devil on Wheels (1947)
- SoundtracksThe Matador
By The Sadies
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- Bajki szczura Finka
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 18m(78 min)
- Color
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